Paper
1 August 1991 POPS: parallel opportunistic photointerpretation system
Michael D. Howard
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Photointerpretation is a computationally expensive process. An opportunistic knowledge-based approach to the problem has been developed and proven effective for target recognition on the ground and in the air. The system hypothesizes about the identity of regions in an image based on their geometric and intensity properties. Each region looks for support for its interpretation based on its spatial relationships with other hypotheses. In this paper parallel implementation using a supporting spatial representation on an eight node Hypercube (a coarse-grained, local memory, message passing machine) is described. The algorithm would be equally suitable for a local area network of workstations. A quadtree data structure representing each image region can be compactly and efficiently coded into a few integers; hence, passing regions between computer nodes becomes a reasonable algorithmic device.
© (1991) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Michael D. Howard "POPS: parallel opportunistic photointerpretation system", Proc. SPIE 1471, Automatic Object Recognition, (1 August 1991); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.44898
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KEYWORDS
Image segmentation

Image processing

Roads

Photointerpretation

Algorithm development

Binary data

Geographic information systems

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